by jimwalton » Sun Nov 17, 2013 8:37 pm
I think it's quite fair to say that Christians deeply misunderstand the teachings of the Bible on healing. If you read the Old Testament, there are only about 3 healings in the whole pre-Christ history that are recorded there. Three. Then during Jesus, of course, hundreds if not thousands. Then after Jesus, a few again (maybe less than 10), and on into history. Christians take some of Jesus' words, and Paul's teaching about the gift of healing, and, if I may be both respectful and blunt, misapply, misunderstand, and mislead about the "gift" of healing. I will say that maybe a few people in history have had such a thing, but the kind of quackery that goes on in the name of Christ is embarrassing to the cause.
Look at James 5.14, notice
1. Christians get sick
2. Call for the elders. Doctors were scarce. Oil was one of their primarily medicines, as generic as it was. They believed in the power of prayer. So the general principles are: get some medical care, and remember to pray. Notice that anointing with oil will not necessarily lead to healing. Nor is it implied that oil is necessary.
3. "And the prayer offered in faith will make the sick person well." Remember that the apostles themselves didn't have indiscriminate powers of healing. Paul didn't heal Epaphroditus (Phil. 2.27). He left his buddy Trophimus sick at Miletus (2 Tim. 4.20). James is obviously not meaning that the elders (or prayer) have unrestricted power to heal the sick! It's wrong to take this in an absolute and unconditional sense, or no one would ever die again.
But it is true that there is no circumstance of life where faith is impossible, and therefore no situation in which the Christian cannot resort to prayer. The idea is that we should always seek God for our physical needs, but there is nothing here to suggest that it is God's will that everybody should enjoy at all time perfect physical health, that no one need ever get sick, and if they do, it's an easy oil dump and prayer and you're on your way! That's just a total misunderstanding of the Bible.
I think it's quite fair to say that Christians deeply misunderstand the teachings of the Bible on healing. If you read the Old Testament, there are only about 3 healings in the whole pre-Christ history that are recorded there. Three. Then during Jesus, of course, hundreds if not thousands. Then after Jesus, a few again (maybe less than 10), and on into history. Christians take some of Jesus' words, and Paul's teaching about the gift of healing, and, if I may be both respectful and blunt, misapply, misunderstand, and mislead about the "gift" of healing. I will say that maybe a few people in history have had such a thing, but the kind of quackery that goes on in the name of Christ is embarrassing to the cause.
Look at James 5.14, notice
1. Christians get sick
2. Call for the elders. Doctors were scarce. Oil was one of their primarily medicines, as generic as it was. They believed in the power of prayer. So the general principles are: get some medical care, and remember to pray. Notice that anointing with oil will not necessarily lead to healing. Nor is it implied that oil is necessary.
3. "And the prayer offered in faith will make the sick person well." Remember that the apostles themselves didn't have indiscriminate powers of healing. Paul didn't heal Epaphroditus (Phil. 2.27). He left his buddy Trophimus sick at Miletus (2 Tim. 4.20). James is obviously not meaning that the elders (or prayer) have unrestricted power to heal the sick! It's wrong to take this in an absolute and unconditional sense, or no one would ever die again.
But it is true that there is no circumstance of life where faith is impossible, and therefore no situation in which the Christian cannot resort to prayer. The idea is that we should always seek God for our physical needs, but there is nothing here to suggest that it is God's will that everybody should enjoy at all time perfect physical health, that no one need ever get sick, and if they do, it's an easy oil dump and prayer and you're on your way! That's just a total misunderstanding of the Bible.